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Che Plant 


Is located in New Wilmington, Pa.,— 
midway between Mercer and New Castle 
— sixty miles west of Pittsburgh. It is 
in the midst of a beautiful, healthful 
region, in a town of near a thousand inhabitants, with four 





churches and no saloons. 

It comprises four buildings which are adequate to the 
present needs of the institution. The old College, which in 
addition to lecture rooms contains the chapel, library, reading 
room, studio, and society halls; the Science Hall with full pro- 
vision for teaching the physical sciences according to modern 
methods; the Ladies’ Hall containing private rooms for fifty 
students and the Gymnasium. 

The College has courses in classics, science, literature, 
music and art; a Conservatory of Music with a competent 
and conscientious director and pianos for practice; a studio 
with provision for all kinds of Art Study, China Kiln, etc.; a: 
gymnasium with regular instruction and drill for all who so 
elect, and an athletic field well adapted to its purposes. 








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COLLEGE STREET, SOUTH OF CAMPUS. 








MAIN COLLEGE BUILDING. 


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BOILER ROOM—NEW SCIENCE BUILDING. 


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A CORNER IN THE ASSAYING LABORATORY. 


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ORGANIC LABORATORY—CHEMICAL DEPARTMENT. 


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GENERAL LABORATORY—CHEMICAL DEPARTMENT, 


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ELECTRICAL LABORATORY. 








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NORTH SIDE OF PHYSICAL LABORATORY. 


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A PART OF THE MUSEUM. 


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DIRECTOR’S ROOM—MUSIC DEPARTMENT, 








RECEPTION PARLORS—CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC. 





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STUDIO—ART DEPARTMENT. 

















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A CORNER OF THE GYMNASIU 


Che Personnel. 


7 7/E may include in this both faculty and 
‘| students. The men and women in charge 
of the several departments have been tried 
and not found wanting. They are grad- 
uates of Westminster, Allegheny, Harvard 
and other colleges. Some have gone 
abroad for additional study after completing their courses in 
this country and others have studied in the universities of 
our own land. They are fully competent to the work of 
their respective positions and are ambitious to secure the 
best results for their students in scholarship and character. 
The students come largely from the section of country 
to which the college belongs (from Eastern Ohio and Western 
Pennsylvania). Pittsburgh and C~<tn 
Allegheny send a goodly number. | 
But there are representatives from 
other cities and states— from Phil- 
adelphia and Detroit and Buffalo 
—and from smaller towns and 
rural districts of the regions inter- 
vening. They come almost uni- 
versally from Christian families of 








sturdy stock and sound training. %, 


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Che Output. 


HE first class was graduated in 1854, and 
every year, since then, with the exception 
of one, has added to the list of graduates 
until the number exceeds thirteen hun- 
dred. They are found in all professions, 
though the largest number serve God 

and their generation in the ranks of the Gospel ministry. 

They are found in many lands—Egypt, India, Persia, Japan, 

Siam, China, and the Philippines. 





The vast majority of them have done well materially 
and morally. Westminster is justified of her children. 





Che Outlook. 


RESENT preparedness for work encourages 
a hopeful prospect; we may expect that to 
be done which the college is capable of 

sa’ doing. The past year though full of success- 
ful labor has been full of trial. There has been a constant 
struggle with more or less straightened finances. But the 
synods which are responsible for its guidance and support are 
now aiming at better things. The prospect is well under way 
to raise an additional endowment of $200,000 by the year 

1902, when the college will reach its year of jubilee. Friends 

of the institution will count it a privilege to promote by good 

words and liberal gifts the success of the present undertaking. 

With the solid footing thus secured there is every reason to 

look for a bright and successful career for the institution in 

the fifty years to come. 








Expenses, 


Tuition—$42 per year. 
Boarding in Ladies’ Hall, Including furnished room, light 
and heat, $3.25 to $4.00 per week, two persons in each room. 


Boarding of young men in clubs, $2.00 to $2.75 per 
week ; furnished rooms from 50 cents to $1.00 per week. 





Crains. 


A.M., via Pennsylvania Lines, the P. & 
W. or by the 9.25 o’clock A. M., train, 
P.& L. E.R. R., land passengers at New 
Wilmington in time for dinner. 

Trains leaving Pittsburgh as late as 
pee OO eka ute he alate aie. Re 
enable passengers to reach New Wilming- 





14 ton in time for supper. 

3 Passengers from the South and West 
make close connections at New Castle, 
Pa., for New Wilmington at noon and 7 o’clock P.M. 

Trains from the North via the E. & P., or the N. Y. P. 
& O.R.R., connect with trains at Sharpsville, Pa., so that 
passengers reach New Wilmington at 8.35 o’clock A.M., or 
Bea5oP.M; 

A catalogue giving fuller information will be sent to all 
who may desire one. Send your request to 
R. G. FERGUSON, 

President. 





VIEW OF THE NESHANNOCK NEAR WESTMINSTER. 





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